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authorKyle Gunger <kgunger12@gmail.com>2021-12-03 23:02:52 -0500
committerKyle Gunger <kgunger12@gmail.com>2021-12-03 23:02:52 -0500
commite2d0ed9e507c0d553662dce6efc4b148da1d4336 (patch)
treec8ca2cfdcacb63a92afc56d14d2cee0734dcb6f6
parent0f1d8414d952595e321c0bae2524818256dd0cb5 (diff)
FAQ updates
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- The limited type system provides either fine or loose control depending on your use case (read the docs for more info about `structs`)
- Lack of headers make code less redundant and confusing (for me)
- The language attempts to cram a limited and useful set of high-level features into any environment assuming that a standard library exists to support those features.
+ - Even though there is the *option* to use high level features, a programmer can very easily use none and instead favor fine control over memory and types akin to C or C++.
- The standard library actually provides some control over how the language functions, so it can be adapted for many environments without compilation failure.
- Similar to go, tnsl provides support for multiple return values.